Michele G. Cyr MD, MACP
Associate Dean for Academic Affairs
Professor of Medicine
Professor of Medical Science
Clinical Department Faculty Promotion Workshop October 25, 2017 Warren Alpert Medical School Brown University
Goals of Workshop
▪ Provide basic information about faculty tracks, promotion dossier, process and timeline
Dispel myths Allay fears • Share tips for promotion ▪ Answer your questions
Faculty Track Requirements
Track Employment Search-Brown approved
Teaching Scholar Affiliate Yes
Research Scholar Affiliate Yes
(Research) Affiliate Yes
Clinician Educator Affiliate No
Clinical Any employment arrangement
No
Faculty Tracks/Titles • Clinical: Clinical Professor of Dept.
• Clinician Educator: Professor of Dept., Clinician Educator
• (Research): Professor of Dept. (Research)
• Research Scholar: Professor of Dept.
• Teaching Scholar: Professor of Dept.
Faculty Tracks in Clinical Depts.
Clinician Educator, 469
Clinical, 1003
Pre-Track, 115
Research Scholar, 117
Teaching Scholar, 205
(Research), 167
Term Limits (Up-Or-Out/Over)
Research Scholar and Teaching Scholar ▪ Instructor: one 2-year term
▪ Assistant Professor: three 3-year terms
(Research) ▪ Instructor (Research): one 2-year term
▪ Assistant Professor: no term limit
Clinical, Clinician Educator ▪ All ranks: no term limits
Research Scholar Track Expectations ▪ Independent or collaborative, productive research program
-Contribution to collaborative research should be substantive and distinct at the Professor level
▪ Continuous record of scholarly productivity/publications
▪ National reputation in area of research -International reputation at the Professor level
▪ Demonstrated record of excellence in teaching/advising/mentoring
▪ Excellent clinical skills – positive consideration
▪ Service contributions – positive consideration
Teaching Scholar Track Expectations
▪ Major educational role ▪ Exceptional teaching skills/continue to lead educational
programs at the Professor level
▪ Excellence and innovation in teaching
▪ National reputation in area of expertise
▪ Continuous record of scholarship
▪ Clinical skills – positive consideration
▪ Service contributions – positive consideration
(Research) Track Expectations ▪ Independent/collaborative research program
-Contribution to collaborative research should be substantive and distinct at the Professor level
▪ Continuous record of scholarly productivity
▪ National reputation in area of research - International reputation at the Professor level
▪ Teaching, advising, mentoring/Service contributions – positive consideration
Clinician Educator Track Expectations
▪ Substantial involvement and excellent teaching, advising, mentoring
▪ Important contributions to clinical or research program
▪ Regional reputation in area of expertise -National reputation at the Professor level
▪ Scholarly activity
▪ 200 hours of service/teaching per year
▪ Service contributions – positive consideration
Clinical Track Expectations
▪High level of skill in teaching, advising, mentoring and as a practitioner
▪Regional reputation in area of expertise -National reputation at the Professor level
▪100 hours of service/teaching per year
▪Scholarly activity – positive consideration ▪Required at the Professor level
Promotion Dossier: Who is responsible?
Candidate: Updated CV
Personal statement
Teaching dossier (Teaching Scholar)
Teaching hours (CE, Clinical)
Research responsibilities
Evaluations
Suggestions for external referees
Department: Chair and Chief letters of support
Department promotions committee report
Sample letter sent to referees
Referee letters (dept. and candidate selected)
Teaching evaluations
Curriculum Vitae Tips • Use the Brown format
• Do everything you can to make the reviewers’ job easier!
• Highlight your name on pubs
• Separate presentations into local, regional, national, international
• Organize professional organizations activities with listings of role
• Get feedback from colleagues, chief, promotion committee, chair
• Review a CV of recently promoted faculty member
What not to include in your CV • Personal Information: marital status, children
• APGAR score
• Anything that happened in high school
• Any award/ honor that requires that you buy something
• Athletic achievements (unless Olympic level) or hobbies if not relevant to work
Referee Letters
Purpose: Objective and unbiased assessment regarding your regional/national/international reputation in the field
▪ Referees must be at your promotion rank or higher
▪ Referees may not know you specifically but are provided with your dossier for their review
Teaching Dossier Components ▪ Record of all teaching, advising, mentoring activities –maintain
ongoing
▪ Role in course or rotation
▪ Dates, numbers of and types of learners
▪ Awards received
▪ Evaluations (for classes, lectures and presentations)
▪ Scholarly output from activity (teaching, advising, mentoring)
Research Components
▪Publications resulting from research
▪Research grants ▪ Granting agency
▪ Title of award
▪ Role in grant (PI, co-PI, sub-awardee)
▪ Direct costs
▪ Inclusive years of award
▪Research trainees
Teaching Evaluations
▪ Keep a file of any evaluations received
▪ Electronic evaluation systems: ▪ OASIS (Brown medical school students
▪ E-Value (GME programs)
▪ Ask program administrators for help ▪ Clerkships, residencies, fellowships, CME
Personal Statement
• Tell the story of your career path - biographical essay
• Keep it brief – no more than 2 pages
• Explain what might not be clear from your CV
• Help the reader understand who you are, what you do and what gives you joy in your career. Remember your track!
• Present your goals/aspirations and how you hope to realize them. Remember your track!
• Don’t simply redo CV in complete sentences
The Promotion Process Spring: Year 7/Assistant Professor, RST/TST
• Candidate and Dept. Chair decide if time is right for promotion • Candidate confirms track • Candidate is informed of departmental deadlines and prepares
promotion documents -CV, referee list, teaching dossier (if applicable)
• Preliminary departmental review • Promotion Committee/Dept. Chair informs candidate about going
forward for promotion
The Promotion Process Summer: Year 7/8
▪ Department solicits referee letters for approved
candidates
The Promotion Process Fall/Winter/Spring: Year 8
▪ Dept. Promotion Committee reviews completed dossiers
and recommends candidate to Chair ▪ Department submits completed dossier to CMFA ▪ CMFA reviews dossiers and votes on promotions
▪ Dept. may submit an updated CV to CMFA before review
Variations on Timeline for Promotion-TST/RST
▪ Term Extensions ▪ Up to three 1-year extensions ▪ Request must be submitted within one year of the
event
▪ One-year Notice of Non-Renewal ▪ Faculty can be reviewed in Year 9 if they waive their
notice
Committee on Medical Faculty Appointments and Promotions- CMFA
▪ Membership
Full professor, medical academic or campus-based tenured/3 year terms -5 from medical academic faculty in clinical depts. -1 from biology departments -1 from Public Health -3 from other university departments
▪ Reviews all senior-level promotions and appointments in clinical departments
▪ Meets throughout the academic year ▪ All members read your dossier and formulate questions for the Dept. Chair ▪ Dept. Chair presents your dossier/answers questions/makes clarifications
The Promotion Approval Process
CMFA Dean Provost President Corporation
Chair may inform
candidate of CMFA
vote
BMFA Letter to candidate
pending corp. approval
As of July 1,
candidate may use
official title
Tips for Success in the Promotion Process ▪ Understand promotion criteria for your track
▪ Cultivate mentors/sponsors; Seek guidance early and often ▪ Especially important to help develop national reputation
▪ Decide career niche early – set goals annually ▪ Use annual reviews and self assessment forms to assess your
progress
▪ Update CV regularly
▪ Time management is crucial
▪ Keep a promotion file
▪ Request review by department chair and/or BMFA
Promotions Success: Publications
▪ First authorship – don’t rush to be senior author until Associate Professor
▪ Abstracts into publications
▪ Peer-reviewed original publications vs review articles, book chapters, case reports
Promotions Success: Research
▪ Establish your niche and develop a track record as an independent/collaborative investigator
-Although collaborative research is fine, being too closely tied to your mentor could be problematic when the dept. solicits referee letters
▪ Apply for grants often and early
▪ Do not focus only on R01s
Promotions Success: Teaching/Advising/Mentoring
▪ Keep records of ALL invited presentations(e.g., CME talks, Grand Rounds)
▪ Save all evaluations
▪ Update your teaching dossier regularly
▪ Keep a list of mentees/advisees
Promotions Success: Regional, National and International Reputation
▪ Get involved with professional organization(s)/take on leadership roles
▪ Say “yes” to study sections, editorial boards
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